Through the first four weeks of the 2013 NFL season, Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos, along with the Kansas City Chiefs and
the New England Patriots, remain unbeaten atop the AFC.

"If we can just keep getting better and better, that's the goal," says Broncos head coach JOHN FOX on his team's focus. "We
want to be playing our best football in February."

Through Week 4, the Broncos have scored an NFL-best 179 points (44. 8 per game), the second-most points in a team's first four
games in NFL history, trailing only the 1966 Dallas Cowboys (183 points).

On Sunday against the Cowboys at AT&T Stadium (CBS, 4:25 PM ET), Denver needs 39 points to set the all-time record for the
most points in a team's first five games in NFL history.

The teams with the most points in the first five games of a season:

Team

Season

Points

Source: NFL *Through four games

St. Louis Rams

2000

217

Chicago Bears

1941

209

Dallas Cowboys

1966

193

Dallas Cowboys

1968

193

New Orleans Saints

2009

192

Denver Broncos*

2013

179

Manning, who is in his 16th NFL season and second in Denver, has led the Broncos to 15 consecutive regular-season wins, the
longest active streak in the NFL. With a victory on Sunday at Dallas, Manning can join New England's TOM BRADY as the only
quarterbacks in NFL history to win at least 16 consecutive regular-season games multiple times in a career.

Manning and Brady's winning streaks of at least 16 regular-season games as starters:

Player

Team

Streak Date

Streak

Source: NFL *Active

Tom Brady

New England Patriots

12/17/2006-9/14/2009

21

Tom Brady

New England Patriots

10/5/2003-10/24/2003

18

Peyton Manning

Indianapolis Colts

11/2/2008-12/17/2009

23

Peyton Manning*

Denver Broncos

10/15/2012-present

15

Through Week 4, Manning leads the NFL in completions (117), passing yards (1,470), touchdown passes (16) and passer
rating (138). Manning's 16 touchdown passes are the most through the first four games of a season in NFL history.

"They are not nearly as good right now as they will be in November," says Manning's former head coach and NBC Sports analyst TONY DUNGY. "These receivers are still learning him and are going to be even better in a month."